Feeling Tweaky


I recently tried my first system tweak, purchasing IsoAcoustic Orea isolation footers for my Luxman 507uX Mk2 integrated amp, Marantz Ruby CD/SACD player, and Shunyate Hydra Denali 6000S power conditioner. I liked the improvement in sound quality so much I’ve gone ahead and ordered IsoAcoustic Gaia feet for my VPI Classic 2 turntable and Magico A3 speakers. I never expected a tweak to make such an improvement, not just a change, in sound quality. By the way, my cables are Audioquest Rocket 88 speaker cables, Audioquest Colorado cables from the CD/SACD player, and VPI phono cables. The Shunyata Hydra Denali has a Venom power cable. All the other power cords are what came with each component.

Acoustic room treatments that would affect room decor are unfortunately out of the equation and I’ve already tried my best to design component shelving to be a vibration free as I could. I’ve thought about are redoing the house wiring to create a dedicated circuit, and making an ultrasonic record cleaner.

So my question to you all is, what tweaks have had the most positive impact on your own system, that you could you recommend for the above described system? There seems to be a lot of tweaks out there that range from the sublime to the ridiculous in both performance and price. I’d like to know what tweaks of the many out there have worked best for you so I can make a list and prioritize each in terms of performance and budget. Please share your favorites and I’d appreciate your advice. Thanks,


Mike



skyscraper

Showing 14 responses by geoffkait

Everything must be tweaked. 🤗

“When Bob Gilliland made the first flight of the SR-71 on December 22, 1964, engineers were still tweaking 379 items on the aircraft. That didn’t deter Gilliland, who took the airplane to 50,000 feet and Mach 1.5. At a 2010 talk in Ridgecrest, California, Gilliland recounted that he ignored the one error message he saw in the cockpit that day: “Canopy Unsafe.”

We have the cold war, Kelly Johnson, and the CIA to thank for what is still the fastest aircraft propelled by jet engines. Once the U-2 proved vulnerable to the Soviet Union’s surface-to-air missiles, the CIA issued a contract for a spyplane that could evade SAMs. Johnson responded with the A-12, the aircraft that would evolve into the SR-71.”

Your Mommy lets you watch too much TV, dude. It must’ve shrunk your brain.
Don’t have an aneurism. Ask your Mommy if you can help with taking out the trash.

isochronism
Miller, I tried the Teleportstion Tweak. Geoff’s Mom answered and said he was in time-out....

>>>>>Maybe your Mommy can help you with your spelling.

mijostyn

Geoffkait, you see? People do know when you are joking or being serious. It’s fine to have obtuse thinking but you have to display it carefully with strangers. Must of us are just plain dumb. I include myself in that category.

>>>>>I gratefully accept your advice, coming as it does from someone who I strongly suspect displays himself to strangers frequently.
Suspending cables and power cords provides the best of all worlds. No more micro vibration, no more seismic type vibration, no more static electric fields. No more pencils, no more books, no more teacher’s dirty looks! 😠
Sorbothane. Not a big fan. No offense to anyone who embraces Sorbothane but I believe it blocks energy from getting out of the system. If you’re looking for a viscoelastic material to use as constrained layer damper there are better materials, much better. Best results when mounting components on cones will generally be using extremely hard materials, like very hard cones - but not like carbon fiber ones, which are relatively soft. Brass is another relatively soft material to avoid, and aluminum. And lead. Ugh! Hardness of the material is proportional to the speed energy is released from the system. Besides, Sorbothane has little or no effect in the worst offender - very low frequency vibration coming up from the floor.  As Bob Dylan says at the end of all his records, good luck to everyone.
skyscraper OP
Geoff, I’d still like to hear from you what tweaks, if any, have worked best for you.

Mike

>>>>Huh? Mike, I rattled off a list of tweaks a few moments ago. I am a tweak manufacturer and lover of tweaks. I’m also a lover of the bayou. 🤗 Stick with me, I’ll take you to the top. 
It’s nice to see all the newcomers and has beens too on the big wide wonderful world of carefree tweakery. When we get to the part about Silver Rainbow 🌈 Foils, Schumann frequency generators, Quantum Chips and Dots, Mpingo discs and tiny little bowls please wake me up.
@millercarbon, what’s up with all the personal attacks? My guess is an inferiority complex. Please give my condolences to your liver.
Gentle readers, be ever vigilant for The Last Tweak syndrome. That’s when you think your system cannot possibly sound any better right after you installed some tweak or other. 
skyscraper
Geoffkait, following your suggestion I considered taking all my books
outside and starting a good-sized bonfire with them. I bet you nobody’s ever thought of doing that before.

👍 You’ve already read them all, right? 
skyscraper OP
My listening room is filled with wall to wall bookshelves, so there’s hardly a square inch to acoustically treat. I seriously considered one of those Lyngdorf integrated amps with Room Correction for that reason since they could electronically deal with that issue.

>>>>Hi, I’m from the future where we found out books and other media like CDs are bad for the sound. The biggest improvement you can make to your sound is to remove all books from the room. Perhaps you can rent a storage shed? Sorry to be the bear 🐻 of bad gnus 🐃 And yes, I know what you’re thinking, “but books are natural acoustic absorbers.”